Warmer, oxygen-poor waters threaten world’s ‘most heavily exploited’ fish 
By Elizabeth Claire Alberts PE Source: mongabay 1/6/2022
Elizabeth Claire Alberts
A new report using core samples taken from the seabed has determined that the Humboldt Current system off the coast of Peru was home to smaller fish during the last interglacial period, 130,000 years ago.
The conditions back then — with little oxygen content in the ocean and temperatures about 2°C (3.6°F) warmer than the average temperature in the current Holocene epoch — mirror those that scientists have predicted for 2100.
While many studies have argued that warmer water and lower oxygen lead to smaller fish, the added pressure of industrial fishing has made it difficult to determine the threat that climate change will pose on fisheries.
The Humboldt Current system is one of the most productive fisheries in the world, contributing to more than 15% of the global annual fish catch, so significant changes to this system will threaten food security.
 

In 2008, a team of researchers boarded an expedition vessel and set sail for the anchovy-rich waters off the coast of Peru. They were searching for a place to extract a sediment sample that would unearth secrets about the ocean from 130,000 years ago, a time when the planet was experiencing its last interglacial period. About 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of Lima, the researchers found an ideal spot; they bore into the seabed and drew out a 20-meter (66-foot) core sample.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1126Elephantnose Fish ‘Sees’ by Doing an Electric Boogiescientificamerican2023-11-06DE
1127Aucklanders ignore safety warnings to fish in polluted harbourrnz2023-11-09NZ
1128Хороший клев лобастой кефали в Сочиohotniki2023-11-16RU
1129US Commercial fishing groups sue tire manufacturers over fish-killing chemicalreuters2023-11-08US
1130Salmon are vanishing from the Yukon River — and so is a way of lifegrist2023-11-09CA
1131Sixth grader hooks mammoth koi fish from a Houston-area pondchron2023-11-09US
1132Key Indonesian fish populations depleted & new assessments neededmongabay2023-10-31ID
1133Why don’t fish have tonsils? They have a good alternative, study suggestsscience2023-11-01US
1134Why volunteers rescue 1,000s of stranded fish every fall from this irrigation canalcalgaryjournal2023-11-01CA
1135Japanese consumers are eating more local fish in spite of Chinas ban due to Fukushima wastewaterabcnews2023-11-02JP
1136Fish travel in style on train as man keeps tanks air filter goingFox News2023-11-03US
1137Abundance of Fraser River pink salmon run exceeds forecastCTV News2023-08-23CA
1138Newfoundland fishermen get 'best news' on northern cod stocks in a generationCTV News2023-11-03CA
1139Fishing Equipment Market to Reach $23 Billion, Globally, by 2032 at 4.8% CAGRwfmz2023-11-16US
1140N.W.T. fishing camp creating community for active and veteran military membersCBC News2023-11-17CA
1141Frisch: Season Highlightsechopress2023-11-17US
1142Generation of B.C. salmon wiped out by central coast landslidethestar2020-12-15CA
1143Massive landslide on B.C. coast imperils dwindling salmon stocksCBC News2020-12-15CA
1144Study of 17,000 years of fish fossils reveals rapid evolutionscience2023-10-04US
1145America’s eel RAS superstarthefishsite2023-11-15US
1146Таежный крокодилohotniki2023-11-09RU
1147Fishing school takes students out of the classroom and out on the waterCBC News2023-10-29CA
1148Sea-lice outbreak on Icelandic salmon farm a ‘welfare disaster’, footage showstheguardian2023-11-03UK
1149CBS News Sacramento Nimbus Fish Hatchery's salmon ladder opens after low oxygen levels in waterCBS Sacramento2023-11-03US
1150Row over plans to build new type of fish farm in Scottish lochthenational2023-11-01UK

215 216 217 45 of [218 - pages.]